MLB News

Kluber's career-high 14 K's lead Tribe to 'W'

Gomes has big night as Indians gain a game in Wild Card chase

By
Chris AbshireSpecial to MLB.com

HOUSTON -- In a strange turn of events given the teams' respective records, it was the Indians who were playing spoiler to the Astros on Tuesday night. And in the process, Cleveland got back on the horse with a much-needed victory.

The Indians put a damper on Jose Altuve's record-setting night, using Yan Gomes' two-run homer and another tremendous outing from Corey Kluber to hold off the Astros, 4-2, at Minute Maid Park and climb to five games back of the second American League Wild Card spot after the Royals lost, 7-5.

HOUSTON -- In a strange turn of events given the teams' respective records, it was the Indians who were playing spoiler to the Astros on Tuesday night. And in the process, Cleveland got back on the horse with a much-needed victory.

The Indians put a damper on Jose Altuve's record-setting night, using Yan Gomes' two-run homer and another tremendous outing from Corey Kluber to hold off the Astros, 4-2, at Minute Maid Park and climb to five games back of the second American League Wild Card spot after the Royals lost, 7-5.

The win snapped a frustrating four-game losing skid and earned the Tribe its 30th victory since the All-Star break.

"We're trying to finish the year strong these last two weeks," said manager Terry Francona. "We're showing up every day to win and meet our goals, period."

Altuve may have been the star of the show, tallying a pair of hits to tie and ultimately surpass Craig Biggio's Astros record of 210 hits in a single season, set in 1998. But it was Kluber who was the true difference maker for the result.

Prior to the game, Indians general manager Chris Antonetti spoke to the media and pleaded his case for the righty to be a serious Cy Young Award candidate.

Kluber made Antonetti look like a prophet hours later, as he struck out a career-high 14 hitters and overcame a couple rugged innings to finish with seven innings of one-run ball.

"Today, he had to work into it, but once he did ... it was electric even though I thought [the Astros] did a good job," Francona said. "His stuff is just so late-moving. There's a reason he has all those strikeouts."

It was the most strikeouts by a Cleveland hurler since Bartolo Colon fanned 14 Blue Jays in May of 1998. Kluber now has 244 strikeouts this season, already good enough for 12th on the team's single-season list.

"There were times tonight we needed strikeouts, not just outs," Francona said. "He looks as strong as ever."

The Astros still recorded seven hits off Kluber, and he had to finagle out of a bases-loaded jam in the fourth inning.

"I didn't consistently execute throughout the game, but I did at the points when we needed it," Kluber said. "Yan kind of led me through the early part and then backed me up."

One inning later, Altuve tied Biggio's mark with a scorching chopper down the third-base line. He broke it off Kluber with a seeing-eye grounder up the middle in the seventh.

Kluber backed off after the record breaker, giving Altuve his moment even though the single moved a runner into scoring position and brought the tying run up to the plate.

"That's a big accomplishment for him to have more hits than anybody in the history of that franchise," Kluber said. "You let him enjoy that."

Just like Kluber stopped that rally and many other Astros threats, he may as well be the Indians stopper this season. Tuesday's outing marked the fourth time this season Kluber has delivered a win with the team mired in a four-game losing streak.

"Like I told some of the coaches in there, it was probably one of the better games I've ever seen pitched," said Astros interim manager Tom Lawless. "He was real good. He's one of the best [Major League] pitchers."

For the second straight day, the Indians provided some early run support. Carlos Santana was again the culprit, driving in a run on a fielder's choice groundout.